Description

Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived CATHERINE OF ARAGON: the pious Spanish Catholic who suffered years of miscarriages and failed to produce a male heir...ANNE BOLEYN: the pretty, clever, French-educated Protestant whose marriage to Henry changed England forever...JANE SEYMOUR: the demure and submissive contrast to Anne Boleyn's radical and vampish style...ANNE OF CLEVES: 'the mare of Flanders' whose short marriage to the overweight Henry followed a farcical 'beauty contest'...CATHERINE HOWARD: the flirtatious teenager whose adulteries made a fool of the ageing king...CATHERINE PARR: the shrewd, religiously radical bluestocking who outlived him...In this dazzling study, David Starkey gives us a richly textured picture of daily life at the Tudor Court from the woman's point of view. Above all, he establishes the interaction of the private and the public, and demonstrates how the Queens of Henry VIII were central in determining political policy.show more

About David Starkey

David Starkey is Honorary Fellow of Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, and the author of acclaimed histories including Elizabeth and Monarchy. He was presented with the Norton Medlicott Medal for Services to History by Britain's Historical Association. He is a well-known TV and radio personality. He was made a CBE in 2007.show more

Review quote

"A tribute to Starkey's narrative drive, his puckish wit and sharp discrimination" Sunday Times "Relentlessly scholarly...Starkey's is the best study of Henry's wives ever published... A masterly and persuasive narrative which never loses its grip over the story or the reader" Evening Standard "High-powered history pithily expressed... This study of Henry VIII's women shows David Starkey at his best" Sunday Telegraph "So gripping that one finishes it wishing it were even longer... The punchy style adopted by Starkey is perfectly suited to the story he has to tell" Mail on Sunday "Starkey keeps the narrative alive with a combination of sound chronology, peppery opinion and startling detail... Six Wives provides an intriguing new perspective on this key period in English history" Daily Telegraphshow more

Review Text

As Starkey points out in his introduction, the story of Henry VIII and his wives has everything: love, violence, death, treachery, betrayal and hunger for power, in quantities that would put a modern soap opera to shame. Although the events in question took place more than 400 years ago, their ramifications have echoed down subsequent centuries of British history, to the extent that there are few Britons alive who are ignorant of at least some of the facets of this extraordinary story. Although the author might come under fire from ardent feminists for his jokey classification - again in the introduction - of the wives into stereotypes such as 'Dim Fat Girl' and 'Sexy Teenager', Starkey does a remarkable job of bringing the women vividly to life while almost rendering Henry himself invisible. Here, the focus is on the wives themselves, their motivation, their social circles and their political and religious leanings. Instead of treating them as toys, to be picked up or discarded according to the King's whims, we gain a very powerful sense of them as people in their own right. As one might expect, the major part - nearly the first 600 pages - of this doorstep of a tome is devoted to the first two marriages: the 20 years Henry spent with Catherine of Aragon, whose saintly demeanour was tempered only by the warrior-like tendencies she had inherited from her parents, Ferdinand and Isabella; and his comparatively brief marriage, after a long courtship, to Anne Boleyn. The implications of the latter, naturally, sent seismic shockwaves throughout not just England, but the whole of Europe and shaped Britain as it is today. Hence it is right that Starkey spends much of his time describing the key players in the religious and political manoeuvrings that took place around this time. He clearly has some admiration for Anne Boleyn's keen intelligence, and his deft penstrokes render her, as in his descriptions of all the other wives, a living, breathing entity. Indeed, although this exhaustive historical work is crammed with reference and detail, Starkey's very readable popular touch makes it a real page-turner. He spends comparatively less time on each of the subsequent four wives, although he manages to imbue Catherine Howard, the penultimate, with a more sympathetically rounded personality than many other historians have achieved, citing her warm-hearted attempts to reconcile his rival daughters, the half-sisters and future Queens, Mary and Elizabeth. A thoroughly enjoyable read: if you buy one history book this year, make it this one! (Kirkus UK)show more